Family getaway to Tweetsie Railroad

Need a family getaway? Then Tweestsie Railroad is a great place to go. They have it all at this amusement park, live entertainment, rides, places to eat, places to shop, and a deer park. Here is a description of some of the rides at Tweetsie Railroad. Free Fall – Marvel at the spectacular view from the top! … For the brief moment before plummeting in zero gravity! Minimum passenger height 48". Tornado – Reap the whirlwind when the Tornado sweeps you off the ground and into the sky — where you can twirl your own seat as much as you dare! Minimum passenger height 48". Great rides for smaller kids are the Merry-Go-Round, Ferris wheel, Mouse Mine Train, plus many more. One of the most famous entertainment attractions at Tweetsie is the Wild West Train Adventure. Which you will Ride the rails with Tweetsie’s Wild West Cowboys – a Tweetsie tradition. Our Cowboys will show you a rootin’ tootin’ good time on Main Street and during your adventure around the track. You never know what might happen, so keep a sharp eye out for marauding renegades plundering on the warpath. And when the ride’s over, the adventure’s not. When you come to Tweetsie, you get unlimited rides on the train throughout the day. If your hungry then tweetise has plenty of options to choose from. Sparky’s Southwestern & Barbecue has real NC barbecue, plus favorite burritos, tacos, wraps and nachos. There are many other places to eat with ice cream, soft pretzels, tweetsie’s famous fudge, funnel cakes, pizza, and hotdogs. Tweestsie Railroad Blowing Rock is a great place to get away from the heat if you don’t live in the High Country and a great place to take your kids. General Admission is $35 dollars for Adults and $22 for children 3-12 and children 2 and under is always free.

Mast General Stores

The First Mast General Store started in Valle Crucis North Carolina. Visitors come from all over to visit one of the first Mast General Stores, Since Mast General Store was built in Valle Crucis there has been 7 more General stores have been built throughout North Carolina and South Carolina. The other stores are Boone NC, Asheville NC, Hendersonville NC, Waynesville NC, Columbia SC, Greenville SC, and Knoxville TN. Before there were mega-malls and specialty stores, before there were department and discount stores, there was the general store – a family-owned, folksy place where you could buy flour, fabrics, nails or grain while getting caught up on local news , where those short on cash paid in trade (a chicken for a sack of flour, etc.) What’s making a – ahem – "general store" so popular that people sometimes have to squeeze sideways between the aisles? Well, variety, for one. It still sells "granny gowns" and "long johns," but they’re between the Flyshacker, Miss Erika, Northern Isles, Woolrich and other quality brands of sportswear, from tops to bottoms. And Mast has such other "general store" items as cast iron cookware, woven baskets, pottery and bird feeders. But is also carries portable GPS devices and precision compasses; outdoor stoves and streamwater purification systems; insect and bear repellents; backpacks and sleeping bags of every size and style; and other hiking and camping gear and casual footwear from Patagonia, Keen, Ecco, Mountain Hardware and Jansport, among other brands. If you love coming up to the High Country why don’t you check out our local listings and see what the High Country has to offer.

NC Mountain Real Estate – Choose and Cut Christmas Tree Season

 

2011 truly has been an excellent year for real estate here in the NC and VA Mountains.  Although we have seen a slight correction in prices our local NC Mountain Real Estate market has continued to flourish.  NC and VA Mountain Land has probably seen a larger decline in prices moreso than NC and VA Mountain Homes.  As we are looking forward to the Holiday Season we are hoping to have even more people in the area exploring our are here in Ashe County NC and Watauga County NC.  The small towns of West Jefferson NC, Boone NC, and Blowing Rock NC all become alive with lots of Holiday festivities that generally circle around the NC Christmas Tree industry.  As Thanksgiving draws nearer Choose and Cut in the NC Mountains comes alive as well.  If you make a trip to our area feel free to give me a call if you have any questions concerning NC Mountain Real Estate.  I look forward to seeing you in our area and assisting you in any way possible with any real estate need you may have.

Highway Safety Program Campaign

State and local law enforcement officers cited 1,937 motorists for driving while impaired during the “Booze it and lose it." The Campaign was called Operation Firecracker, while the campaign only ran from June 29th – July 9th. This is good news for families and everybody else on the road that these criminals are getting removed from the road before any accidents happen. The highest number of DWI citations was Mecklenburg with 107, Wake with 106 and Robeson with 76. This campaign was a good success for the state and local law enforcement. Campaigns like this one will send information throughout NC and will hopefully make people think twice before getting behind the wheel while impaired. In the High Country area, the numbers were not as high with Watauga County North Carolina having 13 DWI citations, Ashe with three, and Avery with eight.

River House Inn and Restaurant

 

A hidden gem here in the NC Mountains is the River House Inn and Restaurant.  It truly is a great place to enjoy a wonderful meal or to even spend the night at during a visit to our area.  Below is a recent review of the River House.  Enjoy!

 

Review by the Greensboro News & Record

Charmed by a Country Inn
By Stan Swofford

Imagine sitting in a rocking chair on the front porch of a century-old farmhouse-restaurant and marvelling at mist rising from a wide, crystal-clear, ancient river as fireflies begin practicing a show that will soon have surrounding hills twinkling like diamonds.

The peace and beauty of the place and moment lull you into a wonderful reverie — but not for long. Competing for, and soon winning over, your senses are delicious smells wafting through the open windows from the kitchen and dining room.

 

Well, you don’t have to just imagine. The place is real, and it’s only about two hours from Greensboro. This is River House, a country inn and restaurant nestled in a natural bowl formed by mountains and the North Fork of the New River in Ashe County in northwestern North Carolina.

 

The natural beauty of the mountains and the New River is reason enough to drive the approximately 130 miles from Greensboro. Add the superb food, charm and hospitality of River House, and a weekend there becomes one that many people repeat over and over again.

Coasting beside the river

“Elegance, without a sign of pretentiousness.” That’s what innkeeper Gayle Winston says she strives for at River House. Her guests believe she has succeeded, judging from the comments in the inn’s guest book:

“A delight! Along the river are shades of green, patent yellow to emerald, and all the shades between. There are sounds not often heard by those who rush. Hospitality! Wonderful food! And many wonderful memories.”

“As nice as visiting a special friend’s home.”

River House is actually one three-story main house and five outbuildings. River House’s restaurant, bar, dining room and sitting room is on the first floor, and Winston lives on the top two floors. Winston converted the outbuildings into seven guest rooms. From outside, the outbuildings look just like what they used to be – a chicken house, carriage house, caretaker’s house and weigh station (where produce was weighed) on a working farm. But open the doors, and you’ll see rooms filled with antiques, books, paintings, a huge Jacuzzi whirlpool tub and a king-size bed.

Winston said she likes to think of all her guests as honeymooners. Add sensuousness to the elegance she strives for at River House.

One of the first things a guest notices at River House is the books: novels, biographies, history books, every kind of book. They line the walls of guest rooms in the main house and the out-buildings, and they’ve been well read. Hundreds of cookbooks fill two wall-size bookshelves in the sitting room of the main house. Winston accumulated them over the years as she developed and honed her culinary skills. They signal to guests that this is place where food is very special.

Guests browse the books in the library or chat in rockers on the front porch and watch ducks and canoes glide down the river. Others gather in the bar for drinks while waiting for dinner. Some, such as Debra and Peter Perret, drove up from Winston-Salem. Others traveled from Doe Run in nearby Virginia. Some were local, from West Jefferson, less than 10 miles from River House. Some visit regularly from Blowing Rock and Boone, about 30 miles away.

Amy Hart, bartender as well as River House manager, distributed menus as she mixed cocktails and poured white wine. Winston moved easily from the kitchen, where she assisted chef Bill Klein, to her guests, greeting many by their first names. She says she’s never had a guest she didn’t like. “This is like having friends over every day,” she said.

The restaurant is open to the public for dinner, as well as overnight guests. There are two sittings for dinner, one at 6 and one at 8:30.

A sample dinner menu might include appetizers such as warm asparagus salad with mushrooms and hollandaise; red pepper soup with creme fraiche and lobster; frog legs with carrot-lemongrass broth and plum tomato.

Entrees on a recent night included tenderloin filet with melted leeks, potato gnocchi, and mushrooms; duck breast with lentils du puy, artichokes and savoy cabbage; and marine halibut with tapenade, tomato tartlette and zucchini.

Winston hired Klein as the River House chef seven years ago, when he was only 21, and trained and supervised him for three years. He was so talented that she encouraged him to get his culinary arts degree. Klein then studied for a year in France with some of the country’s best chefs. He also worked in four-star restaurants in San Francisco before returning this year to Ashe County, his home, and to River House.

But Klein still defers to Winston, especially when it comes to desserts. Desserts are her domain. There are people who travel a hundred miles or more several times a year for another piece of Winston’s chocolate bourbon cake or another helping of her bread pudding.

Veteran River House guests enjoy initiating newcomers to Winston’s bread pudding. “You can’t leave here without trying it,” said one, as she summoned a waiter to order another serving. The pudding is crusty outside, moist and rich inside and chock-full of currents that have been soaked in brandy. She was right; the dessert was to die for.

Just as good, though, was breakfast at River House, and Winston prepares it to order after placing a pot of freshly-brewed coffee outside each guest’s room. Her gourmet breakfasts include fresh-squeezed orange juice, fresh fruit, and a choice of hot foods, including French toast, pancakes, sherried eggs and omelets. Her mushroom and cheese omelet is on a par with her bread pudding.

A remarkable life

Winston, at 72, embraces innkeeping and cooking with the same verve and enthusiasm that have marked her many other pursuits during her remarkable life.

Winston, a 10th generation Ashe County native, was fresh out of college and armed with an English degree when she went to New York in the 1950s looking for a job as a journalist. She landed at Time magazine, where she met Leslie Stevens, a copyboy who had written a play and needed a producer.

At 23, Winston became his producer. “I guess I didn’t know any better,” she said. “I just went out and begged for the money.” She got it, and produced Steven’s play, “Bullfight,” off-Broadway. She produced several other plays, and worked with people such as Joanne Woodward and Roger Stevens, for whom Stevens Center in Winston-Salem is named.

Winston took her fund-raising prowess into the political arena where she worked for Democrat Adlai Stevenson in his unsuccessful campaign for the presidency against Republican Dwight Eisenhower. During this time Winston worked and became friends with two young men who would make quite a name for themselves in political circles: Jack and Robert Kennedy.

In 1958, she married Ron Winston, a film and television writer, producer and director whose work included the Hallmark Hall of Fame series and the television show, “The Outer Limits.”

Winston loved New York — its different people, cultures, ideas and food, especially the food. She became a regular reader of Gourmet magazine, and her original edition of Gourmet Cookbook is still with her in River House.

Ron Winston died in 1973, and Gayle Winston moved back to Ashe County to an environment that was worlds away from New York City. But Winston tackled her new world with the same enthusiasm as when she produced her first New York play.

Winston bought the house and farm that had belonged to her great-grandfather, and, along with brief stints as a schoolteacher and librarian, she became a cattle farmer. Her farm, which was not far from River House, eventually grew to 1,000 acres and supported 350 head of beef cattle.

Winston, however, missed the fine restaurants of New York. Beginning in 1976, she began opening and operating a series of restaurants, including, the Troutdale Dining Room in Troutdale, Va.; the Glendale Springs Inn, just off the Blue Ridge Parkway; Greystone Inn in Roaring Gap; Old Salem Tavern in Winston-Salem; The Tavern in Abingdon, Va.; and, finally, River House.

She has sold or closed all the other restaurants except Old Salem Tavern and River House.

Winston bought River House in 1988. She had admired the property for years, and knew something of its history. The house and farm had been the property of James Larkin “Doc” Ballou, a physician, inventor, environmentalist and ecoologist, who died in 1966. Winston renovated the cottage that had been his office, and it’s now one of her guest rooms.

Winston has expanded the property to about 170 acres, including a mile of river frontage.

The New River, despite its name, is even older than the Nile, geologists say.

Ponder that as you sit on the River House front porch and watch a mother duck and her babies paddling by. Time, at least in the anxious way we have come to know it, seems irrelevant here.

Like it has for thousands of years, the river flows serenely and gracefully toward its destination, an elegant complement to River House and its innkeeper.

WANT TO GO?

Where: River House Country Inn and Restaurant

How to get there: From Greensboro, take I-40 West to Winston-Salem. Then take U.S. 421 North to Wilkesboro. Just north of Wilkesboro, turn right on N.C. 16. Proceed on N.C. 16 through Jefferson and travel about 10 miles to the North Fork New River Bridge. Immediately after crossing the bridge take a sharp left turn onto Old Field Creek Road. Go down a dip for 100 feet to a stop sign, and turn right. The river is on your left, and River House will be the first house you see, about a half-mile on the right.

What to do: Many North Carolina and Virginia mountain attractions are within easy driving distances of River House. The Blue Ridge Parkway is about 20 minutes away. Blowing Rock, Tweetsie Railroad, Boone and Grandfather Mountain are no more than an hour’s drive. The New River State Park, where you can rent and launch canoes, is about 10 miles from River House. The Barter Theatre in Abingdon, Va., is about an hour’s drive. Also, you can hike or ride your bicycle on the near-by Virginia Creeper Trail, or visit Mount Jefferson, Grayson Highlands and the Bluff Mountain Nature Conservancy.

Highland Games Grandfather Mountain NC

Starting July 12-15 2012 Grandfather Mountain will be premiering the Scottish Highland games, located near Blowing Rock and Boone NC. It is the 57th annual highland games held at MacRae Meadows on Grandfather Mountain. People from all over the world come to the beautiful western NC Mountains to participate and take on the festivities and events. Here are some of the activities that you do not want to miss.

On the first day there will be the bear run which is a 5 mile run. But it is not your typical 5 mile run; it’s a hard earned run. You start at an elevation of around 3712 feet and run to the summit of Grandfather Mountain, which is a total of about 1568 feet of elevation.

The music at the highland games is a not the typical North American music that you are used to. The Celtic music jam always gets a big crowd playing folk musical traditions of Western Europe. The Jam will include traditional style to more of contemporary style of music.

The Athletic events and music competitions are very popular to watch. There are Piping, drumming, fiddling and harp competitions. Also there is track and field events held at the oval track. Some of those events include 60 yard and 100 yard dashes, a 2m mile cross country race, high jump, pole vault, running broad jump, highland wrestling and tug of war.

There are many more events and activities that were left out, but you need to come yourself to see the beautiful High Country of NC and enjoy this wonderful event.

Upgrading Downtown and Park in West Jefferson

While shopping in downtown West Jefferson take some time and look at the great work that was done on the sidewalks. With a little landscaping and having the sidewalks done in brick and concrete gives downtown a new look. West Jefferson’s Historic town always brings people all over Western NC and this improvement will make local people and tourists love downtown even more.

Also come and enjoy the new track that was built at the town park. The new asphalt track runs around the whole park. Adults can take their kids around the track and stop at the different swing sets, slides, ball field, tennis courts and playground. To make the park become safer, lights were built along the track. Whether enjoying time with your kids or trying to stay in shape, these enhancements have improved this beautiful park.

Walls with a Story in West Jefferson

In the Historic town of West Jefferson NC there are 14 painted murals on the different buildings throughout West Jefferson. Each mural has a special meaning to it done by different artists, students and community volunteers. These murals give the town more excitement and more history. Check back for some pictures and History of the paintings.

The Mural located on the side of Regency Properties began in 1996 by an local artist named Jack Young. The mural is titled “History of Ashe Through the Ages”. The mural shows the county in different seasons.

Back when roads were hard to travel through the high country of NC, the trains and railroads were depended upon for supplies in Ashe County. In 2001 Stephan Shoemaker painted a mural on the Dollar tire building, with the title of “Cut at Devil Stairs”.

As there are many more murals to see and to talk about, you just have to come see them in person, to experience these beautiful buildings that brighten the town.

New Jobs Coming Soon!

A Goodwill building in Ashe County is currently in progress and soon there could be up to 12-15 full-time jobs. The store is planning on being finished around January 2013. The Store will be located between Community One Bank and Ashe County High School in West Jefferson. The store is not currently hiring at the moment but you can apply at www.goodwillnwnc.org. Goodwill is a not-for-profit organization that provides job training. A lot of goodwill’s funds come from other retail thrift stores which are also nonprofit as well. Goodwill will provide a place to donate clothes, shoes, books, furniture in good condition, household decorations, and electronics.

Appalachian State Baseball

Our Local college here in the High Country Mountains, the Appalachian State baseball team finished 29th overall in the National Rankings in Division I. This is the highest ranking that the mountaineers baseball team has had since joining the NCAA Division I. The Mountaineers finished the season with a school record of 41-18. Next year the mountaineer baseball team hopes to continue the success that they had this year, but will have to do it with a new staff. Chris Pollard took the head coaching job at the University of Duke. Billy Jones the assistant coach at Oklahoma State will replace Pollard. Jones has been at Oklahoma State for eight seasons. Jones was a big part in the cowboy’s staff; he was one of the top recruiters in the nation and helped out with the hitters and outfielders. Next year should bring in big crowds to the newly built stadium as the mountaineers try to go for another successful season.